sloughter wrote on 08/08/10 at 11:47:34:
What is the bar for athesists and agnostics when it comes to accepting miracles?
There is no bar. It is only that things of this sort
never happen. Yes, there is the occasional report that someone's cancer was cured after Pope John Paul II came to town, or that the Virgin Mary appeared to a couple of Portuguese children, but these reports are so sporadic and so obviously dependent upon the strong degree of prior religious belief of those reporting them, as to mock the notion that they are true.
I can assure you, if you would only stand in the middle of Central Park and summon up a band of angels; if the trees there would all bow down to the priests; if the crucified Jesus with his dripping wounds would come as well and cure all the cancer cases on Manhattan, you would make a believer out of me. But not only does nothing like that ever happen, but it is very easy to understand why it doesn't.
The remarkable thing is not that some people don't believe in that stuff, but that anyone does. But that belief is easy enough to explain by culture and upbringing.
sloughter wrote on 08/08/10 at 11:47:34:
Religion arose as a means to explain what seemed, in some cases, to be unfair or illogical. Hence women going through immense pain in childbirth prompted the idea they were being "punished" for some unknown reason. This begat the concept of "God the Punisher or a vengeful God"; the whole story of Adam and Eve and Genesis, in general, is an attempt to provide a framework to describe reality.
I don't know that all those speculations are true, but in principle, I agree. Each of the various religions is but a model of reality, a guide to action.
I would only say that each is fairly obviously false and unuseful in light of Mankind's current knowledge of this world. [Why does my spell check think that "unuseful" is not correct?]
Uruk wrote on 08/07/10 at 14:00:36:
MNb wrote on 08/07/10 at 11:53:37:
Uruk wrote on 08/07/10 at 01:53:35:
P.S. I'm saying essentially the same as Markovich. Models of reality are chosen for their efficiency.
In science, yes.
In general. Efficient models help survival.
Yes indeed,
in general. There are many models that we unconsciously apply every day, secure only in our faith that they are true. That the experiential field is not the totality of existence, but is but the indication of an objective reality, is a notable one. There is nothing
scientific about that in Popper's sense. There is nothing
falsifiable about it. Yet it is a highly useful model, the rejection of which would be taken as a sign of insanity. The same way with the consciousness of other people.